The interface between the stellar wind and interstellar medium around R Cassiopeiae revealed by far-infrared imaging
T. Ueta, R.E. Stencel, I. Yamamura, K.M. Geise, A. Karska, H., Izumiura, Y. Nakada, M. Matsuura, Y. Ita, T. Tanabe, H. Fukushi, N., Matsunaga, H. Mito, A.K. Speck

TL;DR
This study uses far-infrared imaging to analyze the bow shock structure around R Cassiopeiae, revealing details about the interaction between stellar wind and interstellar medium, including dust temperature and flow velocity.
Contribution
The paper presents the first detailed far-infrared imaging analysis of R Cas's bow shock, determining its inclination, dust temperature, and local interstellar medium flow characteristics.
Findings
Bow shock inclination angle is 68 degrees.
Dust temperature in the bow shock exceeds 20 K.
Interstellar medium flow velocity is at least 55.6 km/s.
Abstract
The circumstellar dust shells of intermediate initial-mass (about 1 to 8 solar masses) evolved stars are generated by copious mass loss during the asymptotic giant branch phase. The density structure of their circumstellar shell is the direct evidence of mass loss processes, from which we can investigate the nature of mass loss. We used the AKARI Infrared Astronomy Satellite and the Spitzer Space Telescope to obtain the surface brightness maps of an evolved star R Cas at far-infrared wavelengths, since the temperature of dust decreases as the distance from the star increases and one needs to probe dust at lower temperatures, i.e., at longer wavelengths. The observed shell structure and the star's known proper motion suggest that the structure represents the interface regions between the dusty wind and the interstellar medium. The deconvolved structures are fitted with the analytic bow…
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